// What to read next

What to read after The Code Book

Where to go after The Code Book, picked from our catalog. The next step up from beginner level, weighted toward the topics this book covers.

  1. 01 · 2024

    Serious Cryptography

    Jean-Philippe Aumasson's working introduction to modern cryptography, written for engineers who need both intuition and enough mathematical depth to evaluate the choices a library is making for them.

    Intermediate
    5/5Jean-Philippe Aumasson
  2. 02 · 2021

    Real-World Cryptography

    David Wong's hands-on tour of the cryptographic primitives, protocols and pitfalls that show up in actual production systems, with deliberate attention to TLS, Noise, modern AEAD, and post-quantum.

    Intermediate
    5/5David Wong
  3. 03 · 2010

    Understanding Cryptography

    A genuinely teachable intro to modern cryptography that derives the math instead of hand-waving it, covering symmetric and public-key primitives without drowning you in proofs.

    Intermediate
    4/5Christof Paar, Jan Pelzl
  4. 04 · 2011

    Kingpin

    Kevin Poulsen's reconstruction of Max Butler's career — from white-hat consultant to running CardersMarket, the carding forum that consolidated the early-2000s underground — and the FBI investigation that finally took him down.

    Beginner
    5/5Kevin Poulsen
  5. 05 · 1989

    The Cuckoo's Egg

    Clifford Stoll's first-person account of investigating a 75-cent accounting discrepancy at LBNL that turned into a year-long pursuit of a KGB-paid intruder across early-internet networks.

    Beginner
    5/5Clifford Stoll
  6. 06 · 2014

    @War

    Shane Harris on the entanglement of US military doctrine, the intelligence community, and private contractors after cyberspace was declared the fifth warfighting domain.

    Beginner
    4/5Shane Harris
  7. 07 · 2019

    Cult of the Dead Cow

    Joseph Menn's history of cDc — the Texas-rooted hacking collective that coined 'hacktivism', shipped Back Orifice, and threaded its way through three decades of the security industry's coming-of-age.

    Beginner
    4/5Joseph Menn
  8. 08 · 2016

    Dark Territory

    Fred Kaplan's policy-side history of US cyber capability, from Reagan-era panic about WarGames to the institutional buildup of NSA's offensive arm and the political fights over its use.

    Beginner
    4/5Fred Kaplan
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